Father, son from Illinois killed in Kabul attack

CHICAGO (AP) — A proud father visiting his son in Afghanistan spent what would become both men's final days seeing the city where the younger man ran a small clinic, drinking tea with a university colleague and learning about his son's work.

A planned visit to a Kabul hospital brought them together with a third Illinois man, a doctor who shared their interest in the Afghan people and a faith-driven commitment to helping others.

Gary Gabel of suburban Chicago and his son, John Gabel, were killed Thursday when an Afghan police security guard opened fire on the group as they entered the grounds of a hospital in Kabul. Also killed was Dr. Jerry Umanos, a pediatrician from Chicago. John Gabel's wife, Teresa, also an American, was wounded.

What prompted the guard to fire on the Americans was not clear, but recently there have been a number of so-called insider attacks — incidents in which Afghan security forces fire on their comrades or foreign trainers or civilians. Violence increased in Afghanistan ahead of the NATO withdrawal and also in the weeks leading up to the country's April 5 election.

Whether the couple's young daughter, Laila, and John Gabel's mother, Betty, were along for the visit to the Cure International Hospital remains unclear. Umanos, who trained young doctors and cared for pediatric patients at the hospital, had invited the family as his guests.

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"Giving back to those in need was special to all the Gabel family," Arlington Heights Mayor Thomas W. Hayes told The Associated Press. The mayor said he's known the family for 25 years as members of the Orchard Evangelical Free Church in Arlington Heights, and learned of the deaths first "through the church grapevine" and then from a church email to members.

Gary Gabel sang in the church choir, was involved with church youth groups and the leadership team. Hayes coached John and his own son, both now in their early 30s, when they played on a church basketball team. John, who was tall, was the team's center.

Hayes described the church as a close-knit group, which has grown over at least four decades to 2,000 members in four suburbs.

"It's going to be a very difficult time tomorrow morning, I can tell you that," Hayes said of Sunday's church service.

Family and friends grieved privately Saturday. The Associated Press left phone messages for Gabel family members that weren't immediately returned.

"Out of respect for the Gabel family, we don't have anything to say at this time," church spokeswoman Claire Bechard said in an email to the AP. She confirmed the Gabels are church members.

Kabul University vice chancellor Mohammad Hadi Hadayati remembered John Gabel as a "good friend" who worked for the Colorado Springs-based charity Morning Star Development and ran a small health clinic that provided a pharmacy and emergency care for the students, professors and employees.

John Gabel had directed the clinic for two years under an agreement between Kabul University and Morning Star, Hadayati said. A phone message left with Morning Star Development on Saturday was not immediately returned.

"We have lost a great man, a great teacher, a man who was here only to serve the Afghan people," said Hadayati, who had lunch with the whole family the day before the attack.

"I was very honored to meet John's parents," Hadayati said. "Both his mother and father were so proud of their son."

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Associated Press writer Kay Johnson in Kabul and Thomas Peipert in Denver contributed to this report.